This, apparently, is the plaintive cry Damian Hinds, the Education Secretary for England and Wales, hears from teachers. He said this as part of his answer to a question about whether he is going to do new things or tidy up the work of his predecessors.

I don't think we can avoid innovation, especially in a field like education technology or computing. Indeed, I think we should embrace it. However, there can be little doubt that from a school point of view, innovation 'from the top' is relentless. A few years ago I was invited to address a group of trainee teachers on the topic of the government initiatives currently in place in what was then ICT (Information and Communications Technology). I stopped when I reached 40.

I had a thought, many years ago, a fantasy really, of life inside the Department for Education. I imagined someone thumping the table in a meeting, declaring "We introduced that policy two weeks ago, and nothing has happened yet. We need to do something else!"

While working at the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority, a joint meeting of various agencies -- the QCA, DfE, and a few others -- saw someone from the DfE almost thumping the table.

"We need to come down hard on schools that aren't implementing this policy.", he ranted.

"But who's going to do it?", asked his older colleague. "There's only you and me in the office!"

The best thing a government can do, or any leaders in school, can do I think is to create a culture of innovation. We need innovation, but it doesn't have to be relentless, and it doesn't have to always come from on high. In fact, in my experience, the best ideas frequently come from the people who have to implement them.

I've written extensively about how to create a culture of innovation, and you can browse through them below. A good starting point is the one about 5 minute innovation.

Here’s the second part of this mini-series of ideas to try out in the new school year. I’ll bet your room is festooned with posters of one kind or another. (I know my own classroom had posters with instructions, ephemeral posters relating to the current topic, posters depicting the history of email, and so on.)

With the new school year about to start or, in some parts of the world, already underway, I thought a new mini-series containing some ideas to play with might not come amiss. Here’s the first one, about classroom routines.

How do you start your lessons? Do they always start in the same way? There’s certainly a lot to be said for having a well-established routine, but it’s not a bad idea to shake things up a bit now and again.

To borrow from Dr Johnson, I find that most innovative ideas in ICT I read about are both new and exciting. Unfortunately, the ones that are new are not exciting, and the ones that are exciting are not new. It’s all very well “pushing the boundaries”, but all that does is give you more of the same.

In my opinion there are four main ways of generating ideas that are both genuinely new and genuinely exciting. Here they are.